HI All, just a quick question. I have disconnected the drivers seat in my Nx Pajero from the seat belt buzzer. (pulled out a cable fitting as per a thread on this forum). I have since wondered if this would also turn off the airbags as they would not know there was someone sitting in the drivers seat. Not good in an accident!! Thanks in advance John

I don't believe so. If the airbag receives all the signals that satisfy the criteria to deploy then it should be reasonably safe to assume that someone is in the driver's seat without having to monitor the seat load specifically.

I'm happy to be corrected but if the driver is the sole occupant and the airbags deploy I'm pretty sure that both front airbags deploy therefore validating my theory above.

I would assume the cable you unplugged is for the switch in the seat belt receiver that detects if you have connected to the seat belt (as that is what I did in mine). By disconnecting this, the computer thinks the seat belt is done up, even when it isn't (hence no alarm). As the computer thinks everything is OK, it will activate the airbags as normal.

FYI, If you are considering driving without the seat belt, be aware that part of the SRS system is the seat belt pretensioner. This tightens the seat belt to pull you back into the seat as the airbag deploys.

I would assume the cable you unplugged is for the switch in the seat belt receiver that detects if you have connected to the seat belt (as that is what I did in mine). By disconnecting this, the computer thinks the seat belt is done up, even when it isn't (hence no alarm). As the computer thinks everything is OK, it will activate the airbags as normal.

FYI, If you are considering driving without the seat belt, be aware that part of the SRS system is the seat belt pretensioner. This tightens the seat belt to pull you back into the seat as the airbag deploys.

Also, if you hit something, even at low speed without a belt, or if someone hits you, with the engine running, even if stationary, without a seatbelt on, you may be thrown forward into the airbag deployment zone just as the airbag is deployed with massive force......... it has happened. These devices have hurt and killed people who were either too close or out of position when they deployed correctly (ignoring the separate issue of faulty Takata airbags). Many people don't realise they are sitting just a foot away from a powerful explosive device or several of them in most new cars!